Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

FILM PICK OF THE WEEK

- Nyad Netflix, review by Yvette Huddleston

Annette Bening gives a brilliant performanc­e as long-distance swimmer Diana Nyad in this inspiring biopic about perseveran­ce, resilience and refusing to give up on a dream.

As the film opens Nyad is about to celebrate her 60th birthday. It is a milestone she has very mixed feelings about and it serves as a catalyst for a big decision. Now a respected sports broadcaste­r, as a younger woman Nyad was known for her extreme endurance swims, breaking records along the way, including in 1975 swimming around New York’s Manhattan Island and a 102-mile swim from Bimini in the Bahamas to Florida in 1979.

One particular achievemen­t had eluded her – the 110-mile swim from Cuba to Florida which she attempted in her 20s but failed to complete. This is the one that she decides she is going to go for, much to the surprise of her best friend of many years Bonnie Stoll (Jodie Foster). “You couldn’t do it when you were 28, now you’re 60!” But that is kind of the point. Nyad is taking on ageism and sexism as much as the challenge itself.

She persuades Bonnie to coach her and the film charts Nyad’s gruelling training programme – back in the water after 30 years, she has to persuade her body to get back up to peak fitness in preparatio­n for the extreme conditions she will be facing and the long distances she will have to endure. There are flashbacks to her childhood and the inspiratio­n that her father provided – he recognised her talent and supported her early training – there is also reference to the sexual abuse she suffered from her swimming coach and the lasting emotional damage it caused.

We then follow Nyad’s four attempts, starting in 2011, to complete the swim, hampered by rough seas, life-threatenin­g jellyfish stings and near-misses with sharks until finally succeeding on her fifth attempt, after swimming for more than 50 hours non-stop, in 2013.

Bening is outstandin­g. She empathetic­ally captures both the less likeable aspects of such a forceful, determined character as well as Nyad’s vulnerabil­ity. Foster’s role is the less showy one, but her quiet, understate­d performanc­e is as impressive. The chemistry between the two women works exceptiona­lly well and their portrayal of a complicate­d friendship is totally authentic and believable. This is a fascinatin­g drama about a complex, inspiring woman.

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